October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month
Margaret Steslicki
2/3/2000 12:00:00 AM
October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Breast cancer is
the most common type of cancer experienced by women in America. This
year, more than 175,000 women will lose their lives.
However,
the good news is, when breast cancer is detected early and treated
promptly, fewer women will lose their lives.
According
to the American Cancer Society, the number of deaths could be lowered
if more women follow a three-step plan for good breast health. This
includes breast self examination (BSE), clinical breast exam and mammograms.
If you are between the ages of 18 and 39, you should examine your
breasts every month, have a clinical breast exam every one to three
years and have a baseline mammogram when you are between the ages
of 35 and 39 years. If you are 40-years-old or over, you should examine
your breasts every month, have a clinical breast exam every year and
have a mammogram yearly. By following these three steps, women can
ensure that developing breast cancers are found in their earliest,
most curable stages.
Most
breast cancers are found by women themselves. Practicing monthly breast
self exams (BSE) will alert a woman to any breast changes that may
signal a need to have further evaluation by her health care provider.
If you are a woman who is still menstruating, the best time to do
a self breast exam is five to seven days after your period when your
breasts are not tender or swollen. If your periods have stopped, examine
your breasts on the same day each month (for example: the first day
of the month).
All
women should check their breasts monthly, including their armpits
and chest area up to their collarbone. Always use the pads of your
three middle fingers pressing in dime size circular motions. It is
good to try to use three different pressures, light, medium and deep.
With practice, this will become a part of your monthly routine.
It
is important to become familiar with your own breasts so that you
will be able to detect a change. Common signs and symptoms of an abnormality
that should be reported to your physician may include the following:
breast mass or thickening that is almost always painless, nipple discharge,
a change in the shape of the breast, a lump that does not move, swelling
or redness of the skin, dimpling or puckering of the skin, one breast
larger than the other and lymph node enlargement.
Mammography,
an X-ray of the breast, is the single most effective method for detecting
breast changes that may be cancer, long before symptoms can be seen
or felt. But, mammography must be done routinely. As women age, their
risk of breast cancer increases. High quality mammography screening
should begin at the age of 40 and continue on an annual basis. In
addition to the use of mammography, a woman should also have a clinical
breast exam by a health care provider.
All
women are at risk for breast cancer. However, there are several factors
that may increase the chance that a woman may develop breast cancer.
Risk factors include being older than age 50, having a personal history
of breast cancer, having a mother and/or sister who has had breast
cancer (with the risk increasing if these relatives had cancer in
both breasts and if it occurred before menopause), first childbirth
after age 30, never having children, early onset of menstruation combined
with late menopause, not doing monthly self breast exams, a diet that
is high in fat and low in fiber, obesity (weighing over 40 percent
or more of your ideal body weight) and the use of alcoholic beverages��especially
hard liquor and beer.
Having
one or more of these risk factors does not mean a woman will develop
breast cancer, but it is important to be aware of the risks and the
symptoms of the disease. All women should learn and practice good
health habits that could lead to the early detection of breast cancer.
Remember,
your good health is a gift to you and to those you love. Breast self
exam, clinical breast exam and mammography may save your life or the
life of a loved one. Please share this message with your grandmothers,
mothers, sisters, daughters, aunties and friends. You could save their
lives.
Women's
health screening clinics are held at Nimkee Memorial Wellness Center
every Monday and every two to three months at Standish Community Hospital.
If financial assistance is needed for screening, funding through the
National Breast and Cervical Cancer Control Program (BCCCP) for women
who qualify.
For
more information or if you would like to schedule a screening appointment,
please contact Margaret Steslicki at (517) 775-4618 or Judy Davis
at (517) 775-4629.